Wednesday, October 30, 2024

Hichilema’s facade of fighting corruption in Zambia is slipping

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By Aaron Ng’ambi

The government of the United Party for National Development (UPND), and its alliance partners in Zambia, began its mandate in August 2021, after winning the general elections with a landslide.

President Hakainde Hichilema, popularly known as HH, was a longtime critic of corruption in the previous regimes. He spent 15 years as opposition leader, using anti-corruption rhetoric to gain political mileage. Over time, this strategy paid off as he successfully convinced millions of Zambians that his predecessor, Edgar Lungu, and his party the Patriotic Front (PF) were corrupt to the core and should be voted out of power.

Hence, by 2020, Hichilema was vowing that, if elected to office as the seventh democratic president of Zambia, he would be different from the PF, and that he would put the fight against corruption at the centre stage of his presidency and government.

Unfortunately, time has revealed that HH is no different from any other average African politician who says one thing and does the opposite. The man used propaganda and high-level, sophisticated local and international public relations experts to project an image of him as a “political saint”, a near-perfect figure who would free Zambia from the shackles of corruption. The ploy was believable and he fooled a lot of people.

But, sadly, President HH’s mask, worn for a very long time, is coming off. And his alleged fight against graft is crumbling before our eyes. It is evident that he is either implicated in corruption or outright complicit because he has done almost nothing about the allegations of corruption made against his cabinet ministers, some of his staff at state house and even his private associates.

Nonetheless, a recent report by the Financial Intelligence Centre has shaken up the UPND government. This report, for the year 2023, indicates that corruption and the plunder of national resources has increased drastically under Hichilema and his “new dawn” government in Zambia.

In fact, the same report shows that the value of suspected illicit financial transactions rose by about 132%, from 5.8 billion Zambian kwacha in 2022 to 13.58 billion, in 2023. This is unprecedented, so much so that it provoked an immediate cosmetic response from Hichilema himself. He issued a statement on 10 July, saying that the findings would be investigated.

On the other hand, vice president Mutale Nalumango is on record failing to answer straightforward questions in parliament over the report, a clear sign that the regime is in disarray concerning corruption.

To make matters worse, just a few days after the release of the report, another scandal, at the ministry of health, was exposed. It was established that the ministry, through the Zambia Medicines and Medical Supplies Agency, had engaged the Unified Procurement Authority of Egypt for the supply of medicines and other medical supplies, pegged at $65 million, in August 2023.

However, out of the scheduled delivery of 74 containers of supplies, only about 13 reached the agency’s central warehouse. The remaining 61 containers were diverted to a secret location in the capital Lusaka, the exposé showed.

Meanwhile, hospitals and clinics have experienced drug and supplies shortages since HH and his government won the elections three years ago. This is absurd and shows gross misconduct on the part of the government. Because of this huge embarrassment, the Zambia Medicines and Medical Supplies Agency’s director general has been suspended by the board, pending investigations.

Arguably, the same institution now wants to claim that the amount spent on this messy procurement was only $24 million, not the reported $65 million.

It is utter nonsense for the health minister Sylvia Masebo, and her permanent secretary, to claim ignorance over the undelivered drugs and supplies of such a high-level transaction.

Masebo made a statement in parliament during which she took no responsibility for this huge corruption scandal. This is because she knew that her boss, HH, would do nothing about it, except pay lip service by promising that a forensic audit of the transaction would be carried out. And sure enough, President HH has not fired Masebo, after this scandal — but has since transferred her to the ministry of lands.

In any civilised society, especially in a functional democracy, the president would have fired the minister of health, and everyone else involved in the scandal, without waiting for a so-called forensic audit, even simply because lives have been lost due to the “lack” of drugs in hospitals and clinics countrywide. But the president is incompetent and cannot act because he is either protecting himself or someone close to him.

Furthermore, the Anti-Corruption Commission, which is supposed to be an institution that fights past, present and future corruption, has been compromised in the three years of Hichilema’s rule. Whistleblower O’Brien Kaaba, a courageous commissioner, spoke out about the corruption of the now disgraced director general, who has since resigned, due to public pressure.

The revelations coming from Kaaba focus on corruption at state chambers (the attorney general, solicitor general and director of public prosecutions), not just the Anti-Corruption Commission. The nation has been informed that certain individuals in the state chambers are cutting corrupt deals and facilitating graft.

This has put law-enforcement agencies in an awkward position as the state chambers ought to be an ally in fighting corruption. No serious crusade against corruption can work when the heart of the legal machinery for government is contaminated.

Kaaba indicated that state chambers are also active in looking for litigants to sue the government and pre-agree to settle or enter consent orders involving huge sums of money for them to get kickbacks. The scheme has been perfected to the extent that some orders are now signed using judges outside Lusaka to avoid public scrutiny and media attention in the capital.

This explains the instances where UPND cadres who accused the previous government of illegal detention have now been given fast and fat settlements.

If Hichilema was serious about the fight against corruption, he should have dismissed his senior legal advisors and either set up a commission of inquiry or authorised a special audit into all the high-value payments authorised by state chambers over the past three years. But, of course, the man is either incompetent, compromised or complicit in these crimes.

Kaaba cited specific examples and named individuals, such as the solicitor general, as being involved in such schemes. It is alleged that the current solicitor general received a bribe amounting to $500 000 from a named company. He denies the allegations and has since sued Kaaba for defamation.

When these revelations were made public by Kaaba, the Anti-Corruption Commission’s director general was not fired by HH but resigned. Unfortunately, the board had to pay the price as the president dissolved it immediately — a senseless and unjustified move. Just before it was dissolved, the commission issued a statement confirming that they are, and had been, investigating the solicitor general.

This is interesting because the commission has refused to inform the public if this is true or not. Moreover, why is this same solicitor general still in office, if indeed the Anti-Corruption Commission is investigating him?

HH is silent over the conduct — or rather misconduct — of the solicitor general. But the commission board, which was doing the right thing, had to be dismantled. This is suspicious and the actions, or inaction, of the president raise more questions than answers. Who is he protecting by shielding the solicitor general? If anything, HH should be on the side of the whistleblower Kaaba, a university lecturer who until recently served as commissioner at the now dissolved Anti-Corruption Commission.

In the final analysis, Hichilema might have been a good opposition leader for 15 years but he’s definitely not an impressive president. Just after winning the elections of 2021, HH told the BBC he would appoint people of good character to public office. It took him two or three months to name his cabinet, claiming that he was doing things “methodically”.

The biggest problem with Hichilema’s appointments is patronage because a number of people in key positions happen to be his former personal lawyers, such as the minister of Home Affairs and Internal Security, the Director of Public Prosecution and the Solicitor General. The attorney general is the first lady’s cousin, while the president’s legal advisor is there on account of his late father who worked with HH. Thus, there are no checks and balances in a system where the key appointees are drawn from a small pool of party confidants, all of whom are considered out of their depth.

Perhaps this is part of the reason the president lacks the guts to fire any of his appointees. Instead, he asks them to resign, as was the case with the disgruntled former minister of foreign affairs.

The same scenario played out with the former director general of the Anti-Corruption Commission, who could not be saved, even by his boss, after the corruption scandals at the commission were leaked. All Hichilema did was to politely ask this fellow to resign and then accept his resignation.

In a nutshell, to take root, the fight against corruption in Zambia needs genuine and honest leadership. It is impossible for any leader or president to claim that they are fighting corruption when their own means of wealth accumulation remains a mystery. Also, for the sake of transparency, integrity and accountability, HH should have declared his assets upon assuming office, as prescribed by law.

Finally, we have to recount that on March 31, 2023, US Vice President Kamala Harris, visited Zambia and pledged $16 million for the fight against corruption. Regrettably, now we know, from an insider at the dissolved commission, that those HH entrusted to fight corruption are corrupt themselves.  How will this government account for the money from the US government for fighting graft?

These are fundamental issues that all well-meaning Zambians should be concerned with. Otherwise, we are likely to see many more corruption scandals in the Hichilema administration.

Aaron Ng’ambi is a geopolitical analyst and newspaper columnist, leadership instructor and a social entrepreneur.

Sources: Mail&Guardian

22 COMMENTS

  1. Overall, fairly good write-up, albeit somewhat tainted by a lie that “HH should have declared his assets upon assuming office, as prescribed by law.” Instead, he should have said, “for transparency’s sake, HH should have gone beyond the law’s requirement by publicly declaring his assets.” HH declared his assets with ECZ.

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    • Mayo, the law is just the minimal requirement. HH ran on themes of anti corruption and transparency yet has failed to be transparent in his own finances while holding the highest public office.

      How can the public know there is no conflict of interest in the tendering process without those disclosures by HH? Please note that ECZ, to whom he has made a disclosure, has no mandate to screen for conflict of interest in government tenders.

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  2. Author hit the nail on its head here! ;

    “The biggest problem with Hichilema’s appointments is patronage because a number of people in key positions happen to be his former personal lawyers, such as the minister of Home Affairs and Internal Security, the Director of Public Prosecution and the Solicitor General. The attorney general is the first lady’s cousin, while the president’s legal advisor is there on account of his late father who worked with HH. Thus, there are no checks and balances in a system where the key appointees are drawn from a small pool of party confidants, all of whom are considered out of their depth.

    Perhaps this is part of the reason the president lacks the guts to fire any of his appointees “

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    • This was a powerful paragraph. The President is sadly surrounded by sycophants. The quality of his people, his personal appointments, are ruining us, so much worse than we thought possible under even PF. Wake up Mr President! You have two more years in office.

      18
  3. 1991 FTJ won by 75.77% against KK (24.23) this was more of a landslide than that of 2021 general elections. Hakainde won by 59.02% against ECL (38.8%). this was in fact a very skewed resiult with the Zambezi vote contributing 90% or so. If the vote was less than the two thirds (60%) majority why are the learned people still misleading the public?

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  4. The article however, highlights fundamental issues of why Hakainde’s project is a failed project. This fall has dented the whole tribe. Especially that they seem to be numb in condemning the numerous colossal ills committed by this “new dawn” Govt. Where is “Bally”? The answer is in the pudding.

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  5. Good analysis from a leading South African newspaper. I strongly suggest the person who wrote it must not visit Zambia in the near future, lest he find legal cases slapped on him and police summons for sedition! We never thought HH’s government would abuse the Police and the Courts in the way it has, but that is exactly what is transpiring in the Country.

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  6. The fact is: Gary Nkombo was envious of Chitotela and very much wanted to be in that position and make immeasurable wealth.
    Cornelius Mweetwa was dying to get in the position where Dora Siliya was….
    Elias Matambo would do anything to live like the so-called bulldozer.
    Bottom line they are all in it for themselves.

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  7. “now we know, from an insider at the dissolved commission, that those HH entrusted to fight corruption are corrupt themselves.”
    Thie write is being unfair to HH. When he was appointing ACC members, he had full confidence in them but they have disappointed him and the nation.
    The question is, Was it wrong for the President to fire them? What was he supposed to do in this situation?

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    • HH is applying double standards. Why must the ACC board go and Solicitor General remain? What is special in Solicitor General? Tom Shamakamba has just been sacrificed to the other hyenas in the UPND. The real wolves, as disclosed by Dr Kaaba, are in Minister of Home Affairs, Attorney General Chambers, Director of Public Prosecutions.

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    • He put his tribesmen in and unfairly dismissed those he found there. The only ACC DG that never got dented was that man by name of Mungole.

  8. We saw in UPND what we wanted to see. Here in Australia the diaspora donated money to Mutinta Hichlema for social services during Covid but we found the same Mweemba sent to collect the money has chewed it for himself. Yet he has been appointed as head of the Road Traffic Agency. This is not good governance. They only seem interested in making money for themselves. Badly disappointed with HH, it’s going to be one term for him.

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  9. Everything stated here is true. I believed in Bally personally, but Voting for this group was the WORST mistake since voting for PF in 2011. We honestly cannot wait for 2026, the opposition must not fight one another for the countries larger interest of removing the UPND cancer from State House.

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  10. There is no one in the opposition. We just have to soldier on. It is just the whole system which fails to check each other. corruption at ACC could have been stopped by Secret Security Service of our Army and so forth, but we do not have such setups. Systems should be checking each other out. We should learn to be in disguising. The problem with some people is that they do not know what military cover is. In all situations, there must be military cover.
    Running Government is not a kindergarten affair. It calls for seriousness and any slip up is costly to the country.

  11. I hate corruption and will not support it for whatever reason. Yesterday I asked myself, why did I support these guys? But I have had to ask myself, where are the facts? What about the evidence that might support prosecution?
    For instance people are inferring the FIC report and claiming FIC should be prosecuting. But that is not the role of the FIC.
    Those shouting most are the ones that have tainted hands, are they not shouting most to deflect attention from themselves.
    Let’s fight corruption from the past, that happening now. A lot of these politicians and civil servants have been cultured in these vices, even churches too. It’s a big fight, but it needs to be done objectively rather than based on tribe, party, etc. Corruption is destroying the country.

  12. slips ???
    It should be SLIPPED
    As he has broken all passed records
    in the last 60 Yrs it hasnt been this bad

  13. Maybe this explains why we have not seen any conviction on corruption since the newdawn administration.

  14. Bally must be brave to get out of this mess! Things are not going well for this government and they are in denial! Bally is keeping all the wrong people but it seems they have him by the balls.

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